Resisting Unmet Expectations as Service User Ethics: Implications for Social Work

IF 2.3 Q1 SOCIAL WORK
Alise de Bie, A. Daley, L. Ross, S. Kidd
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

ABSTRACT This paper takes up a call from activists and scholars in Mad and Disability Studies to pay more explicit attention to resistance. Drawing on conceptualizations of predictive, normative, and ideal expectations, we describe three ways 2SLGBTQ service users who have experienced psychosis resist unmet expectations of just treatment. These include: (1) defending self-respect through resistant thinking and resentment; (2) reducing discrepancy through lowering expectations of just treatment from others; (3) and protecting selves through distrust and self-reliance. This paper makes several contributions to existing literature: It expands our understanding of the ‘everyday’ forms of resistance that service users engage in, particularly those that are ‘quiet’ and risk being missed. By paying attention to quiet forms of resistance, we come to recognize the everyday ‘moral talk’ of service users, and opportunities for collectivizing the values underpinning this talk into ethics. Supporting the creation and affirmation of these ethics is one way for social work to address the exclusion of service users from the creation of social work ethical guidelines and respect and acknowledge the legitimacy of service user knowledges, especially their developing visions of justice and moral relations.
抵制未满足的期望作为服务使用者伦理:对社会工作的启示
摘要本文呼吁“疯狂与残疾研究”的积极分子和学者更加明确地关注抵抗。根据预测、规范和理想期望的概念,我们描述了经历过精神病的2SLGBTQ服务用户抵抗未满足的公正治疗期望的三种方式。其中包括:(1)通过抗拒思维和怨恨来捍卫自尊;(2) 通过降低对他人公正待遇的期望来减少差异;(3) 通过不信任和自力更生来保护自己。这篇论文对现有文献做出了几点贡献:它扩展了我们对服务用户参与的“日常”抵抗形式的理解,特别是那些“安静”和有被错过风险的抵抗。通过关注无声的抵抗形式,我们开始认识到服务用户每天的“道德谈话”,以及将支撑这种谈话的价值观集体化为道德的机会。支持创建和肯定这些伦理是社会工作解决将服务用户排除在创建社会工作伦理准则之外的问题,并尊重和承认服务用户知识的合法性,特别是他们对正义和道德关系的发展愿景的一种方式。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
8.30%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: The only journal of its kind in the United States, the Journal of Progressive Human Services covers political, social, personal, and professional problems in human services from a progressive perspective. The journal stimulates debate about major social issues and contributes to the development of the analytical tools needed for building a caring society based on equality and justice. The journal"s contributors examine oppressed and vulnerable groups, struggles by workers and clients on the job and in the community, dilemmas of practice in conservative contexts, and strategies for ending racism, sexism, ageism, heterosexism, and discrimination of persons who are disabled and psychologically distressed.
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